Southwestern Transportation Co. v. Chambliss

125 S.W.2d 123, 197 Ark. 865, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 298
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 20, 1939
Docket4-5342
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 125 S.W.2d 123 (Southwestern Transportation Co. v. Chambliss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southwestern Transportation Co. v. Chambliss, 125 S.W.2d 123, 197 Ark. 865, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 298 (Ark. 1939).

Opinion

Grieein Smith, C. J.

This appeal questions sufficiency of tlie evidence to sustain personal injury verdicts and judgments, one for $2,500 in favor of L. D. Cham-bliss ; tlie other for $1,000 in favor of Glea Chambliss.

L. D. Chambliss claimed that while driving his automobile south on highway 67, he was injured a few miles north of Gurdon when a stick of wood fell from a Southwestern Transportation Company truck. The circumstances alleged were these: While appellee and the driver of a wagon were passing, going in opposite directions, appellant’s truck, driven in a “dangerous, reckless, careless and negligent manner, and at a high rate of speed,” passed the wagon, and after so passing, the truck wheels were “carelessly and negligently cut back to the right side of the highway.” This action caused a stick of wood to fall and be hurled through the windshield of appellee’s car, resulting in cuts on appellee’s face from flying glass, and injury to the left eye.

Glea Ohambliss, daughter of L. D. Chambliss, alleged that her injuries occurred when muscles and ligaments were torn loose from her hip bone and from the lumbar region of her spine; that she suffered contusions of her hip on the right side, and her nerves were completely upset. She said that when the stick came through the windshield, “I tried to get out of the way, and it caused me to hurt my back.”

The causes were consolidated for trial.

It was admitted that appellant’s bus traveled from Camden to Texarkana to Arkadelphia the morning of January 4, 1938, which was the day of the accident.

Alvin Francis, a witness for appellees, testified he was using a wagon in hauling wood and was near the drainage ditch “when the Southwestern truck passed me and moved on out of sight. The truck was traveling rapidly, and as soon as it passed, it came back on its side of the road. I didn’t see anything happen right then. He knocked me off from seeing the car as- he cut out to the side. [Appellees’] car was stopped with the windshield broken. I drove up to where the car was stopped. . . . It was a Southwestern Transportation Company truck that passed me. . . . The old gentleman got out of his car and walked over to where I was. There was glass on his shoulder and on his clothes, and blood was oozing out of his face. His daughter was sitting in the car. After they had stopped for a few minutes they drove on to Gurdon. The old man asked me about the truck and I told him what truck it was.”

On cross-examination the witness was shown a statement he had given C. T. Kelliher. Francis admitted his signature and said, “I told the truth about it. 1 The biggest part is correct, but part is not. . . . The part where you stated that I saw the car stop before the truck passed me. I never testified that at all.”

Following introduction and discussion of the statement, Francis insisted he told Mr. Chambliss the name of the truck; that it had “Southwestern” on it. When asked what else was on the truck, he replied, “Southwestern Transportation.” Asked if he Avas sure as to the Avords “Southwestern Transportation,” he replied: “It had Southwestern Transfer Company [on it]. ” Later, he said: “It had Cotton 'Belt on it.”

“Q. Why didn’t you tell Mr. Chambliss that? A. He knew' Avhat I Avas talking about — he didn’t ask me any further details and I didn’t volunteer [any].” He s‘;id the truck did not have a tarpaulin on it and that he did not remember seeing any truck Avith a tarpaulin on it pass, but did remember, seeing a brick truck, Avhich passed him “right at the Chevrolet.”

L. D. Chambliss testified: “Just as we crossed the [Terre Noire Canal] bridge this big truck came along and a stick of v?ood came off the top of it and went through our Avindshield. My eyes Avere so filled Avith glass I couldn’t see anything. I couldn’t tell what kind of a truck it was. . . . After the truck passed a Avagon, the stick of Avood came from somewhere — it looked to me like off the top of the truck. I was about sixty feet from the wagon when the truck went around it. ’ ’ 2

On cross-examination the witness said the accident happened between ten and eleven o’clock [in the morning’], about four, or five miles from G-urdon and eleven or twelve miles from Arkadelphia. Witness and his daughter drove to the Norris garage at Gurdon. “I knew Mr. Boss at the garage and he called Arkadelphia for me. I told [Mr. Boss] it was a Southwestern Transportation Company truck. Some One asked if there was a tarpaulin on the truck and I told them if there was I didn’t know it. I don’t know whether or not I told him there was a tarpaulin and a stick of wood was holding the tarpaulin down and it fell off. I would not say that I didn’t tell Mr. Boss the kind of truck it was. I couldn’t say what information my daughter may have given Mr. Boss. . . . I didn’t know, neither did my-daughter, whose truck it was.”

Glea Chambliss testified that while driving back from Arkadelphia she saw a wagon ‘ coming meeting us ”; that she saw a truck coming in the same direction the wagon was moving, and it had to “whip around” the wagon in passing. “About the time the truck got even with our car a stick of wood flew from the top of the truck and went through the windshield of our car. The truck was going as fast' as it could, making 50 or, 60 miles an hour. . . . I saw the truck as it passed the wagon and I began to slow down because I knew there would be a collision if we both went full speed. The truck was just getting back on its side, of the road when the stick flew off. . . . The stick was about two and a half or three feet long. . . . When it. came through the windshield I tried to get out of the way and it caused me to hurt my back.”

On cross-examination the witness stated that after the accident she drove to Gurdon at the rate of forty or fifty miles an hour. She was driving fast in order to reach Gurdon before the truck could get to Arkadelphia. Before going for first aid her father went to the [Norris] garage and had the sheriff called. The witness did not see a stick of wood in the road, but “wouldn’t say there wasn’t any.” Miss Chambliss did not get out of the car at the garage. She said: “I didn’t know what kind of a truck it was that the stick of wood fell from — it was just a large truck. I wouldn’t say [whether] the truck had a tarpaulin on it, or not. The stick of wood did not hurt me. I did not notice my back hurting until the next day or two. I went to see Dr. McClain. He didn’t take any X-ray; neither did he plaster my back up in any way, but gave me some linimént to rub on it. I went back to the doctor to see if it would develop into anything else. It did not. My back is better, but I don’t do any work. . . . I have seen the Southwestern Transportation Company’s truck [parked near the courthouse], and the truck from which the stick fell was a large truck just like that one. I saw the stick come from the top of the truck. The parked truck [near the courthouse] has a cab and a trailer, but I don’t remember whether the truck from which the stick fell had a cab and trailer, or not.”

Dr. McClain treated L. D. Chambliss’ injured eye, and testified: ‘ ‘ He didn’t tell me what truck the stick flew from.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 S.W.2d 123, 197 Ark. 865, 1939 Ark. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwestern-transportation-co-v-chambliss-ark-1939.